Preserved Menstruation After Chemoradiotherapy in Stage IIIC1 Cervical Cancer: A Unique Case
Georgia Ilia, Athanasios Thomopoulos, Dimitrios Chronas

TL;DR
A young woman with advanced cervical cancer retained her menstrual cycle after treatment, challenging assumptions about fertility loss in such cases.
Contribution
This is the first reported case of preserved menstruation after ovarian transposition and chemoradiotherapy in FIGO stage IIIC1 cervical cancer.
Findings
Menstruation resumed seven months after treatment completion with regular cycles.
Ovarian reserve was partially preserved, as indicated by hormonal assessment and endometrial thickness.
Low ovarian radiation exposure (<2 Gy) may have contributed to preserved reproductive function.
Abstract
Background: In young women with cervical cancer, fertility preservation remains challenging, as chemoradiotherapy can severely compromise ovarian reserve and endometrial function. Although ovarian transposition prior to pelvic radiotherapy is well established in early-stage disease, evidence regarding ovarian and endometrial outcomes in advanced stages, particularly in the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stage IIIC1, remains extremely limited. Case Presentation: We report the case of a 31-year-old nulliparous woman with a histopathologically confirmed FIGO IIIC1 cervical squamous cell carcinoma who underwent a lateral ovarian transposition followed by external beam radiotherapy (ERBT) of the pelvis and interstitial high-dose-rate (HDR) brachytherapy combined with five cycles of cisplatin-based chemotherapy. A detailed dosimetrical analysis demonstrated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEndometrial and Cervical Cancer Treatments · Reproductive Biology and Fertility · Ovarian cancer diagnosis and treatment
